For the second year running, the tensions and stresses at this time just did not allow me to revise my Holy Week posts for the current year.  So instead, here's the 2013 revision of the Tenebrae section from my Good Friday post, which originally was its own post anyway.  This year I will not even be able to get to Tenebrae, a service that was new to me as a Lutheran and hits me more than anything else in our Lutheran observance. 
What's up with Tenebrae, the "other" Good Friday service besides the "chief service"?   
As   an  RC kid in the 1950s, I used to see  the words "Tenebrae" and   "Sunrise  Service" in the church ads in the  paper for Protestant   churches. It  used to strike me as typical -- you  gotta give them an E   for effort,  they're really trying to do the right  thing, but this is   what happens  when you try to be church apart from the  Church Christ put   here, tinker  around with the pieces of the former unity  apart from   their source  and come up with all sorts of stuff, part of it  the real   deal and  part of it whatever Reformer's ideas of the real deal  one   follows.
I  mean, what's up   with Tenebrae? Everybody knows --  well, everybody  who's a dedicated   altar boy thinking of maybe becoming  a priest --  that Tenebrae isn't the   church's main service on Good  Friday or even  of one day. It's a   collective reference to Matins and  Lauds for the  last three days of Holy   Week, originally said in the  night and early  morning but pushed back  in  the Middle Ages to the  evening before!  Monks do that kind of thing  all  the time.  That's how  we got "noon",  from monks pushing back None, the  office  of the ninth  hour in the  Roman (city/republic/empire, not  church) day,  about three  in the  afternoon, to right after the sixth  hour office at  midday,  Sext, so  you can work the fields all afternoon.
Poor  guys, I  thought,  they  don't even know that "afternoon" is just that, after  None.  Hell,  most of  us don't either, so why be surprised at having a  Matins   service, a word  coming from the Latin for "dawn" and giving us  our  word  matinee for a  daytime showing, at night instead of the  service  that's  supposed to be  there at the ninth hour when he died  (1500  hours if you  know how to  REALLY tell time!), which we ourselves  often  put off until  later so  people can get there after work! Maybe  the  whole thing's our  fault  originally, messing around with stuff. I   mean, if you gotta knock  off  work to go in at 1500 to pray None, just   do it; if you gotta knock  off  work to get to Good Friday service at   1500, just do it. Some  places let  people off about 1, some places they   still don't go to work  at all Good  Friday.
So here they are   having "Tenebrae", a bunch  of Protestants doing  what's supposed to be a   three day monastic service  instead of the day's  normal parish   liturgy, and here I am in an  ordinary parish and have  never been to a   real Tenebrae in my life! Oh  well, at least we have it  someplace and I   know what it is, but you  gotta give them E for effort  and they'll   probably walk right in.  (That's a Catholic thing -- "walk  right in"   means walk right in to  heaven without having to spend any time  in   Purgatory getting rid of  what still needs to be gotten rid of.)
The    heart of the real  Tenebrae is its three "nocturnes" or readings.   These  are: The  Lamentations of Jeremias (Jeremiah); St Augustine's   commentary  on Psalm  54 (in the Vulgate, Psalm 55 to Protestants); St   Paul Hebrews   4:15-5:10 and 9:11-15. And of course there's the putting   out of candles,   one at a time after each Psalm.
My first   experience of anything  by the  name Tenebrae was in the late 90s in   WELS. (I first made  profession of  faith especially as taught in the   Small Catechism in a  WELS parish 15  December, 1996.) Holy Week   consisted of Communion (in  the sense of both  consecration and   communion, though in that context  you'd probably raise  an eyebrow if   you said "mass") on Maundy Thursday  with particular  remembrance of   Jesus' institution of Communion at the  Last Supper, then  "Tenebrae" on   Good Friday, then nothing, meaning no  Easter Vigil at all,  one of  the  most ancient services of the church,  until, hey, "Sunrise   Service" on  Easter, then pancakes, with a later  "Festival" service for   those of  us who might rise with the Son but not  the sun. I wondered a   little  bit -- I had just finished the Tappert Book  of Concord (we  didn't  have  the "McCain" Book of Concord yet!) and  was thinking I had  cast off the   Roman Catholic church for the real catholic  church, but  maybe I ended  up just Protestant after all!
There  was the  putting out of   candles thing, but nothing else of the office  of  Tenebrae. It was   constructed instead around the Seven Last Words,   with each passage read   followed by an appropriate prayer and hymn and   putting out a candle.  No  Lamentations, no St Augustine, no St Paul,  or  if my professors at  my  Benedictine university are to be believed,   whoever wrote Hebrews.   Totally out of my experience, totally new to  my  experience! But I'm   thinking hey, maybe there is a better service  to be  using (even WELS  has  a version of the traditional Good Friday   service!) but the Seven  Last  Words are his seven last words and this  is  Good Friday, at least   nobody's got it mixed up with Holy Thursday  and  offering Communion or   anything, so I'm going with it, each "word"   leading to the end,  Consummatum est, it is finished.
And I'm   sitting there in  darkness  thinking, what is finished? Jesus? Hardly.  He  is risen, and  we will soon  celebrate that. Sin? Hardly. The world  goes  right on  sinning, and me  with it despite myself. But right now,  what  is  finished is the sacrifice  that takes away my sin and the sin  of the   whole world. Passover indeed,  from bondage to the promised  land. Real   nice thoughts to have all safe  here in church but before  long I'll be   back out there where real nice  thoughts are hard to  maintain a lot of   the time. And then it happened.
BAM!   
Strepitus!   It all   came to-gether. The promise, the old covenant, was now  closed,    complete, and the fulfillment was here! Et antiquum  documentum novo    cedat ritui, over ancient forms departing new rites  of grace prevail,    says the hymn Tantum Ergo. For real. So for real  that the earth could   not  support, nor the sky shine on, the injustice  which is my   justification.  And most of all, the veil to the Holy of  Holies in the   Temple is rent  asunder by the full and final High  Priest and the mercy   seat of God is open  wide, and all who are  sprinkled with the blood of  the  full and final  Passover Lamb can,  well, walk right in!
And  so I  shall, but for right  now, I'll  depart in darkness and silence,  stunned  that someone just took  the  bullet I had coming, died so that I  might  live, took my guilt and   gave me his innocence, not to wallow in   survivor's guilt as if this  were  by accident, good for me but bad for   him, or even the supreme  gesture  of another human, but stunned for  the  moment that this is  precisely what  he came to do, on purpose, God  so  loving his children  that he offered  himself for me, for us, and  opens  wide his mercy.  And the silent departure until the joy of Easter morning says more than all the "vigils" of my younger days.
I  have come to  love the Tenebrae service  more  than any other in our  observance.  Tenebrae as Lutherans do it  isn't  always the Seven  Last  Words, or Die sieben letzten Worte as we  "too  German" types like to  say.  It can be for example the Passion  account of  John read in seven  sections, with  an appropriate hymn after  each, and a  petition based on  the prayers in  the traditional  Good Friday  service found as "The Bidding  Prayer" in  TLH p. 116, and  of course the  candle putting out thing.  It's all  good.  I still love  the traditional service of the church for  Good  Friday.  But it ain't  got the Bam. The temple curtain is aside,  the High  Priest  has entered  and the mercy seat is open!
BAM!    
Speaking   of  the  Temple, maybe next year I can get them to work in  Lamentations.   It's  supposed to be there anyway, but there's more to it  than that. Just    as the New Covenant is an organic outgrowth of the  Old, so is worship    in the New Covenant an organic outgrowth of worship  in the Old. What  is   the mass anyway but a Christianised synagogue  Sabbath service  followed   by a Messianic seder? In the Tenebrae with  its traditional   Lamentations  though, instead of understanding worship  in the New   Covenant as an  organic development of worship in the Old,  here New   Covenant worship  actually anticipates what would happen to  the worship   of the Old after  it did not accept the New.  Here's how.
Jesus   said, Destroy  this Temple and in  three days I will build it up. They   thought he meant  the physical  Temple in Jerusalem. Don't we always  do  that? Just a few  days ago we  thought great, here's the Messiah to  cast  off the Romans  and begin the  era of universal peace. God's just  fine  as long as it's  our idea. But he  meant himself. He is the  Temple, he  is the High  Priest, he is the  sacrifice. And you know  what? He'd  better be, because  unless he is, we  ought to call the  whole thing off  because he got what  he deserved, not  by claiming to  be Messiah which  we thought was a man  anyway, but by  claiming to be  God, which is  blasphemy punishable by  death. Unless you are God.  He  said he  was God  and he is, but he was put to death. We say  we're good  people  really  and therefore all going to the same good  place, but  we're not, yet  we  think we're going to live.
Well, the  real  Temple to which the   physical Temple pointed, Jesus, was destroyed  and  in three days built   back up in rising from the dead. And just as he  said, the generation   that saw that had not  passed away before the end  of the world as   previously known before it --  the Temple destroyed,  the priesthood   killed and scattered, the  sacrifices ended. This  happened by the Romans   on the ninth of the Jewish  month of Ab, which  falls somewhere between   what we call late July and  mid August, in 70  AD, or CE (Common Era).   And you know what? That was  exactly the day  on which the first Temple   was destroyed by the  Babylonians in 586 BC,  or BCE (Before the Common   Era) and the people  hauled off into  captivity.
Jeremiah told   them it was coming, and after  it  came, though overwhelmed with what had   happened, he told them this   was not because the enemies' gods are   stronger than ours but because   ours is giving us what we deserve for   our faithlessness, and for that  Jeremiah  was branded a traitor to his   religion and people, flogged at  the Temple  and left for dead in a pit.   His Lamentations was written  at the  destruction of the first Temple.   Tisha Be'Av, or the Ninth of  Ab, is  marked in the synagogue with the   reading of DT 4:25-40 for the  Torah  portion and Jeremiah 8:13-9:23 for   the haftorah, or the  related reading from  the Prophets.
But  that is  not all. Guess  what? In the evening of that  day Jews gather  for the  reading of  Eikha, which is -- Lamentations! One  sits on the  floor like a  mourner  rather than in a seat. It is a full  fast day to  the max -- no   eating, no drinking, no bathing, no leather  shoes, no  perfume or make   up, no sex, although you can smoke or go to  work.  Tradition has it  the  Messiah will be born on Tisha Be'Av, the only   happy thing about  the  day.
At the conclusion of the Passover   Seder, one sings  "Next  Year in Jerusalem". But the Last Seder was in   Jerusalem, and  the full  and final Passover sacrifice has been offered,   as we  commemorate on  this day. The Temple has already been destroyed   though  the physical one  still for a time stands, and so, we read    Lamentations. But this Temple  will be raised again in three days! We    read Lamentations on this Friday of Lamentations not in  mouring over   the loss of two Temples and in  hopes for a third, as if we were under   the Law of Moses, in fact  not in mourning at all for the "Temple" but    for our faithlessness which  destroyed both the physical Temple and the    Temple Jesus to which it  pointed.
You looking for a purpose  to   drive your life?  Wanna  find your best life now?  Wanna make  things   sensitive to seekers?   Looking to put Jesus first?  Well here  it is,   pal.  We read  Lamentations, and celebrate Holy Week in our  various   traditions and  liturgies in union with believers before us,  now, and to   come,  precisely and for no other reason than to profess  ourselves and    proclaim to those who don't know it yet the knowledge  that the Temple  is   indeed raised up again after three days, with the  mercy seat of  the   loving God who opened it for us open to all through  the body and  blood   of the Passover Lamb, even Jesus the Christ!
BAM!  The Cross.  Makes all the difference.  Here's some Gospel about it.
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
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29 March 2013
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